Baker's Estate

39 Pa. D. & C. 405, 1940 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 223
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Columbia County
DecidedJune 17, 1940
Docketnos. 28-31
StatusPublished

This text of 39 Pa. D. & C. 405 (Baker's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Columbia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker's Estate, 39 Pa. D. & C. 405, 1940 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 223 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1940).

Opinion

Humes, J.,'

Dr. Frank Baker, a.resident of Bloomsburg, Columbia County, Pa., died on July 24, 1938, at the age of 56. For many years prior to and within a few days of the date of his death, he was a very active business and professional man in Columbia County and the neighboring counties. By profession, he was a dentist, but of late years his varied and extensive business interests had taken so much of his time that they overshadowed his work in his profession.

A few months before his death, he made conveyances of his Columbia County real estate holdings: on April 2 and 4, 1938, conveying his home to his wife, Pearl Kline Baker; on April 2d, conveying a dwelling house to his daughter, Frances Alverna Pollock, and likewise, on April 2d, conveying to Robert James Baker and Harriet C. Baker a business building and double dwelling; all of these conveyances being in consideration of the sum of $1, “love and affection” for the grantees, and “other moral consideration,” all these deeds being recorded on April 30, 1938, at the court house in Bloomsburg. On May 7,1938, Dr. Baker, with his wife, conveyed to Robert James Baker 13 tracts of land in consideration of $1 and “love and affection and interest in grantee,” this deed being recorded on May 18,1938.

By action of Fred E. Lord, appraiser appointed by the Auditor General of Pennsylvania, a tax was assessed upon the above-described transfers of property by virtue of the Act of June 20, 1919, P. L. 521, art. I, sec. 1, as amended by section 2 of the Act of June 22, 1931, P. L. 690, 72 PS §2301, which imposes a tax “upon the transfer of any property, real or personal, or of any interest therein or income therefrom in trust or otherwise, to persons or corporations. . . .

“(c) When the transfer is of property made by a resident ... by deed, grant, bargain, sale or gift, made in contemplation of the death of the grantor, vendor, or donor, or intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after such death.”
[407]*407“If such transfer is made within one year prior to the death of the grantor, vendor, or donor of a material part of his estate, or in the nature of a final disposition or distribution thereof, and without an adequate valuable consideration, it shall, unless shown to the contrary, be deemed to have been made in contemplation of death within the meaning of this clause.”

Pursuant to the further section of this act, the grantees of the several deeds mentioned in this case, being not satisfied with such appraisement, appealed to this court, and this court, being authorized by section 13 of the Act of 1919, supra, as amended by section 1 of the Act of July 15, 1935, P. L. 1028, 72 PS §2327, has proceeded to the determination of “all questions of valuation and of the liability of the appraised estate for such tax,” testimony having been taken before Judge Herring, president judge of this court on March 12, 1940, counsel having stipulated of record at the hearing that the several appeals should be heard at one time. Judge Herring having been prevented by death from proceeding with further action in these matters, argument was then had before Judge Humes of the Twenty-ninth Judicial District of Pennsylvania, specially presiding; the counsel of record having filed their stipulation, agreeing to waive their right to take further testimony and to allow him to make findings and conclusions of law upon the printed record.

In considering these several appeals, we begin with the presumption that these conveyances were made in contemplation of death. The various elements to bring such presumption into existence are present: (1) The conveyances were of a material portion of Dr. Baker’s estate; (2) they were in the nature of a final disposition or distribution; in fact, they were conveyances carrying out practically what he “had planned to do” in his will; (3) the conveyances were made within a year prior to Dr. Baker’s death; (4) they were made without an adequate valuable consideration. That this is only a presumption is indicated by the phrase “unless shown to [408]*408the contrary”: Case’s Estate, 26 Northamp. 285. Therefore, our only question is whether the several appellants, respecting the several conveyances to them, have shown sufficient evidence to overcome that presumption. We do not deem it necessary to pass upon the technical question as to whether the rule that such transfer shall “be deemed to have been made in contemplation of death within the meaning of this clause” limits the presumption to “contemplation of the death of the grantor, vendor, or donor” only, and does not extend to such transfers as are “intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after such death.”

In determining whether in fact these conveyances were made by Dr. Baker in contemplation of death, we must consider carefully just what is meant by that term. In Shwab v. Doyle, etc., 269 Fed. 321, 328, the court stated:

“ ‘By the term “in contemplation of death” is not meant on the one hand the general expectancy of death which is entertained by all persons, for every person knows that he must die. ... On the other hand, the meaning of the term is not necessarily limited to an expectancy of immediate death or a dying condition. . . . The term “in contemplation of death” involves something between these two extremes. Nor is it necessary, in order to constitute a transfer in contemplation of death, that the conveyance or transfer be made while death is imminent, while it is immediately impending by reason of bodily condition, ill health, disease, or injury, or something of that kind. But a transfer may be said to be made in contemplation . . . if the expectation or anticipation of death in either the immediate or reasonably distant future is the moving cause of the transfer.’ ”

In Rea v. Heiner, etc., 6 F. (2d) 389, 392, contemplation of death within the meaning of the act was construed as “a present apprehension, from some existing bodily or mental condition or impending peril, creating a reasonable fear that death is near at hand; and that, so arising, it must be the direct and animating cause, and [409]*409the only cause, of the transfer. If this apprehension, so arising, is absent, there is not that contemplation of death intended by the statute, especially when another adequate motive actuating the gift is shown”; further on quoting, from Meyer et al., etc., v. United States, 60 Ct. Cls. 474, “ ‘. . . there must be at least a belief that it [death] is to be expected in the very near future, rather than in the usual course of events, and in this state of mind, in this belief, in the near approach of death, must be found the motive for the conveyance’ ”; and stating succinctly at another point that “ ‘the expectation of death must be the direct, specific, and immediate animating cause of the transfer’.”

In Wanamaker’s Estate, 8 D. & C. 569, 573, the court indicated that by “ ‘in contemplation of death,’ we mean, first, that death is contemplated ... as an event . . . that is, in the circumstances, definitely imminent in the near future; and, second, that this contemplation of death exists as the impelling motive of the transfer or gift”.

Examination of the testimony in the instant case with these criteria in mind reveals that, although Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
39 Pa. D. & C. 405, 1940 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bakers-estate-paorphctcolumb-1940.